Travel France
Search Advanced Search
 Location:  Home » Penguin Books » Hornby, Nick » Slam  
Zeugma Travel Shop
Travel Books
Travel Guides on France
Maps on France
Learn French
Books on Paris
DVDs
Music Players
Lonely Planet Country Guides
Cameras on Amazon UK
Music
French Novels
French History
French Classics
Penguin Books
Simone de Beauvoir
Films
Annie Ernaux
Sartre
Gustave Flaubert
Madame De La Fayette
Bestselling Books
Angela Aries
Dictionary
Translators
French Vocabulary
French Cooking
Toys
Rosetta Stone
Kitchen
Software
Other Countries
Zeugma Travel (home)
Related Categories
• Hornby, Nick
H
• General
Fiction
Slam
Slam

 enlarge 
Author: Nick Hornby
Publisher: Penguin Books Ltd
Category: Book

List Price: £7.99
Buy New: £2.15
You Save: £5.84 (73%)



New (26) from £2.15

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 6 reviews
Sales Rank: 208

Media: Paperback
Pages: 304
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 5 x 0.9

ISBN: 0141321407
EAN: 9780141321400
ASIN: 0141321407

Publication Date: April 3, 2008
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Condition: BRAND NEW. UK BASED SELLERS, SENT OUT IN 2 WORKING DAYS

Similar Items:

  • The Complete Polysyllabic Spree
  • The Book Thief
  • On Chesil Beach
  • Engleby
  • Once Upon a Time in the North

Customer Reviews:   Read 1 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars An insight into teenage pregnancy in Hornby's brilliant way!   May 10, 2008
Another great outing from Hornby. I loved the characters as I always do with this author. It was a very amusing read with some really good comedy thrown in but also a really big message that of how having a baby young in life changes your life in so many ways. Obviously having a baby young is going to cause a big change in a life but the way Hornby writes its both funny and moving. Also there is a bit of time travel thrown in just to make it a bit more outn there than his other novels. Not his best but on a par with the rest.


1 out of 5 stars So disappointing   May 2, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Really poor book. I feel cheated of spending money on it. Poorly written with nothing to say. Sam was unappealing and i couldn't care less what happened..he didn't seem to care about anything or anyone and seemed incapable of speaking! Conversations were stilted and story was just poor. The stupid bits where he flashed forward in life were ridiculous too. I was really disappointed and had been a big fan previously. I only hope Hornby can move on and up.


1 out of 5 stars Terrrible, really....   April 26, 2008
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

The story was flat, the usually brilliant Hornby pop culture references are not there. Reference Tony Hawks,reference the name of a few skate board tricks. The only trick Hornby bothered to describe was a 580 and it really does not take a genius to work that out. Its sloppy. The usual line is I was practicing x trick and then move on to something else. If you are expecting a book with lots of skateboarding metaphores you are going to be very dissapointed.

So on to how modern teenagers are portrayed. Well - they seem to have sex in their bedrooms while their parents are in the house a lot..... yeh right of course they do. The teen girls want to have a baby yeh right..... Thats just about all Hornby bothers to tell us about their culture.

The lazy reaserch is continued into the plot... the hero is whisked into the future during his dreams (for real). It makes no difference to his actions in the present and seems only to be there to add a little 'spice' to the story. not neccesary.

This book just seems rushed, flat and uninteresting. I can't find any humor or any incentive to read this again.






5 out of 5 stars Teenage Kicks   April 22, 2008
 1 out of 3 found this review helpful

I wasn't particularly looking forward to reading Nick Hornby's `Slam', his first teenage novel. It was nineteen years since I was last a teenager and even then I think I was probably too old for the term to really stick. However this was a novel by Nick Hornby whose `High Fidelity' is my favourite novel; whose `Fever Pitch' is my favourite memoir; I think you get the idea, I like Nick Hornby, I don't however like teenagers. Anyway there was nothing for it, I had to roll up my sleeves, grit my teeth, grasp the nettle and take the book by the spine.

I'm so glad I did, what a fantastic and painfully funny book. Certainly Hornby's best since `About a Boy' with which it sets a fairly consistent tone. This is quite remarkable as `Slam' is written in the first person as a teenage boy. Although `About a Boy' was very insightful into the mind of an adolescent boy and his relationship with the adults around him it didn't have to do it in the boy's voice. `Slam' is written in a very convincing voice of a fifteen year old boy, although the language and passions for music and skating very much tie the novel to the present the spirit in which it is written ties it to teenagers of any generation and consequently I can feel a certain empathy for a teenager I could obviously have fathered.

I don't want to tell you anything of the plot as it would spoil the book to hear about it in my voice rather than `Sam's', trust me it's better than the blurb which relies too heavily on the Tony Hawks fandom to give a balanced appreciation of the book.

I think that the reason that Sam's voice in `Slam' works is that it still resonates with the same passion as Rob's did in `High Fidelity'. Perhaps the reason Hornby and even I can understand this character so well is that we belong to the first generation that never grew up, we are still essentially teenagers. The four hundred or so middle aged men jumping up and down to `Teenage Kicks' at a recent Undertones concert I attended possibly suffer from the same malaise.



4 out of 5 stars Very good   April 22, 2008
 2 out of 4 found this review helpful

I actually think this is the best book by Hornby since About a Boy.

Hornby had a great book with "About a boy" (please forget the movie and only watch it to waste some time AFTER having read the book). That was the first one I read by him. Then I read High Fidelity, which I thought was good, though not that good. How to be good and A long way down were ok, though I thought Hornby was getting a bit worse every time. Slam is a good comeback in my eyes.


Sponsored Links